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the carolina watchman 0 xvh.-thied seeies 3alis3ury n c october 7 1886 no 0 rictor grain deills kellers patent .â– r sa i e to the farmers of row , l j for cash or well secueed time itotes xhis i rill stands a1 the very â€¢ h nd is unsurpassed by any rin america it sows wheat clover seed and bearded ts to"other with fertilizers i admirably the quantity per acre ran be changed in an instant by a â– miil motion of the hand ' r l ud what people who have '' iy about it \\ \ ernon rowan co n c sept 15th l^g i u -â€¢ 1 the victor kellers paten lor si vcral years and i consider â€¢ machine one can set it in an : to sow any quantity of wheat or re from one peck to four bush ! . ] led its as well as it dues â– â– ' i m fert izers to pel - in i know it to bo strictly a no 1 ; aii'l combines great strength with o 1 qualities w a lu ki-v salisbury n c sept 15th 18s6 last spring i borrowed mr white fralcj's victor kellers patent grain drill and put in my oats with it it sowed bcimk'd mid non-bearded oats to perfection i believe it to be tlie best grain drill i : ner t>aw it sews wheat or oats and clover iced mid fertilizer all o c and j have it one for this t';ili"s bccdiny of the agent john a boyden richard ii cowan salisbury x ('. si t 17th 168g ihivc used the victor kellers patent i drill for the past t-n years au 1 con . far the best drill made i have uu.t ivd the bechford & huffman drill but t,t(.mtl prefer the vic-tor because it is mucii the most convenient and 1 believe victor ill last as ion as two deck & huffman drills the victor sows ill kimlti of grain satisfactorily frank bkuathed jhq a boyden piedmont wagons yes piedmont wag33s made up at hickory yen know why they can't be beat they stand when they ought torighl square at the fhdht ! it wa3 a hard fight but thay have won it ! just read what people say about them and it yon want a wagon come quickly and buy one cither tor cash or on tim sai.lslifuy x < '. sept 1st i8s >. two years ajjo 1 bought n very li:;ht o-hor*e piedmont wagon of the agent lm a boyden have used it marly all he time since have tried it severely in ti'iul i n lc saw loj;s in<l other heavy loads ' ; have not had to pay one cent for re v i look upon the piedmont wagon Â»â€¢ the host thimble skein wajron made in â€¢; 11 ' united states the timber used in " l1 is most excellent and thoroughly e!l smonc 1 turner p tnom v.so salisbury x ('. aug 27th 18si two years apo i bought of john *â€¢ boyden a one-horse piedmont wagon jch has done much service and no part broken or jttven away and conse pntlj i lias cost nothing for repair john i 11 m.y salisbury x c sept 3d isfr'c eighteen months ago 1 boughl of john 14 boydtn r 2 inch thimble skein pied n | wii^.n and have n<t <\ it pretty much the time and it has proved to be a first ** wml'od nothing about it has given '} r ! therefore it has required no re ] sej)t 8th 1886 tgo i bought of the agent i 2j inch thimble skein wagon thiir lightest one-horse 1 have kept it in almost constant riug the time have hauled on it â€¢ loads of wood and that without ag or repair l r webb a lady ; poet ye never saw her like in all i'our dreaming of fair women came not such exqi3itc image with unearthly touch of that ft subtle charm unspeakable which grace for lack of better name we call tune ye the golden instoring ne'er so much their smoothes i c i lence on t i rutch which fain would sing the gentle swell an fall of her immaculate bo am and her eyes â€” all well ! there might h i in ed n day through the d w â€” limpid dusk of eden . twin morning stars of love of such soft rays â€” no in our heav'ns her heart god know eth why he has made beauty passionless not i t i.ia key bell from heilig's mills messrs editors we have had no rain lor three weeks you may know it is dry with us when 1 add that there has been no grinding done at the water mills for some time there is but little oats in the ground up to thi.s time and what is sown has a bad si and m l barger had a narrow escape from death a few days ago i â€¢ was engaged in hauling logs when the wagon turned over and the log came near catching him as it fell a bosi has cut his first barn of to bacco lie says the worms have dam aged it badly this year liev w l drown was installed at organ church on last sunday by rev mr i'ashaw of wilmington the sunday school closed at the liod sheool house last sunday obediah eller is si.de with billious fever farmer for tii watchman messrs editors in answer to in quires from swecetgum grub we would say that we have gotten pretty well over the airthquake skare but not out of the tobacco worm yet they have kept us too busy to write for newspapers it has been all that the growers of the weed could do in this vicinity to prevent them from eating it entirely up and despite of all our efforts they have got the largest share the tobacco crop will fall short of last ' year in quantity quality color and body in our humble judgment the | idose observer will notice that there is an unusual number of worms of every description this year the orchards and woods are webbed up with cati pillars \\ e would like for some of . t he old observing i lrm ts or any one â– else to give us the cause v us i he excessive wet spring condusive our besi wisln s to 1 he < reneral agent but think he oughl to have remembered us with som â– cake our little frien i jeb ; will .â€¢ n leave woodle if for the l':;r:n \ of mr james burkheud on r j | sherrill ford road near salem church where he expects to engage in mer chandising jeb is a good fallow i nd the peopie of woodle if are loth to prat with him and he will carry \\ i h the best wishes of i he p â– pie of i uity ( i.oii k kocker rowan and her democracy is this an off year two years ago the people of these united states went to the polls and james i blaine of the state of maine went to the wall then the people as a nation rested from their labors this restful interval will continue as to the nation for two years to come but are the people of rowan entitled to n rest vvs think not for it is easy to attest and equally easy to demon rat <â– that the election of november prox touches our people more nearly and is of more vital importance to them than the one of two years ago we can live under a republican gen eral government if we are put to it this we have found upon trial we can not live under a republican home government and this we have found upon trial to the latter testify the bitter years during which government by them meant little more than the wreck of affairs bitter years of which an impeached and disfranchised governor an exhaus ted and debauched judiciary a depleted and rifled treasury millions upon mil lions of fraudulent dishonest and now dishonored bonds were issued to burden i the people legislative halls tilled with a streaming press of negroes public insti tutions with dosed doors school houses deserted desolate and decaying coun ties struggling under the incubus of disproportionate debts the kirk war the eighty cents on the hundred tax of l800 the 81.1 17,100.44 squandered and stolen the littlefield-rfwepson steal and the thousand and one spectre shapes of dishonesty debauchery igno rance incompetence and disgrace crowded into them are unforgotten tes timonials \ ears which are a blot of dishonor and a horrible nightmare be fore our eyes yes we have tried this drossy amal gam of negroes and mot t and lveough whites save the mark and found that all that was not scorca a ashes we dr.uik to the lees their acrid cup which was little more than a solution of negrogen stupidity and apostate ras cality and our teeth am still on edge no fear of our joining their party i for when we are prepared to do that we j will rent pews in the african churches take desks for our children in fheir schools and thus make a square hon 1 jest consistent confession all round ! i there h only a fear that wo will stay away from the polls in apprecia ble numbers thus jeopardizing through carelessness the result of a vital elec tion because we think it an off year but is it an off year we will look it over carefully and see w hat branch of the government lies nearesi to the people how many of our people have come directly in con tad and been affected v an executive act proceeding from either our presi dent or governor hardly i dozen w ho is there among us able to bring one single enactment of congress or thu legislature home to himself very few but who is there that the judiciary does not touch and who is not therefore concerned that our judges be men of purity conscience and learning in the laws men to whom you can safely trust your homes your liberty your fair names and your lives democrats ol rowan the people of our state are railed upon to select for themselves nine judges this fall will the demo crats do this as is their right due and duty or will they waive their privileges and permit others who are irresponsi ble prejudiced and ignorant to do it for them chosen by some one they will be and we all must abide the choice however it falls and if we place or suffer a radical judge in a position where if he chooses and such judges have in times past chosen to do this very thing he may draw a party line again.st our property and our reputations we must submit with what grace we can we must say whether we will have our supreme court bench constituted as now of three grand old men whose names are synonyms for probity and earning or such an other exhaustible affair as they gave us before Â« it is left to you to say whether you will have a continuance of purity capacity and fidelity among the judges who come among yon four times a year or whether you will try an assort ment of their men with a cjreasy sara watts or two among them choose the writer of these lines is able to stand it if you are for his interests are identical with your own he is a can didate for self respect alone and for no office or shadow of an office under he sun and never will be then too your county officers your representative jrour senator and your congressman should come in for a share of your notice f you tad to n ic them on election day after that day those elected will suffer you to pass unnoticed in turn for they will not be or your color - in p litii - at le;ist they will be brunettes with political proclivities varying all the way from brindle spotted to solid ebony and warranted fast colors in me 1 em tcrats this is n â– â– an off year for if you sho;il;l allow the election to go by default you will find too late that you i ive done gre iter damage to yourselves than you could possibly have done two year ago are you willing for this sweeping disas trous change are you quite prepared for it could you stand it it it were to come if so decline to take notice of the coming election and pull corn all day long such ap apathetic course as that will insure the parties defeat and then we will tough it out to gether apathy and lethargy in our own ranks are the only means of achieving a victory to which the republicans can look are you k"i i -, r to allow them to win by such means hardly by you of rowan 1 mean those who own her soil support her govern ment maintain her schools disburse her moneys hold the reins of govern ment are responsible for credit and honor who control all she has and is and who aretheref ire rowan ex committee - -Â»Â«Â»Â» - addres3 of tnc democratic state com mittee democratic state executive com raleigh x <'., sept 22 l886 another campaign is upon us and it afiain becomes the duty of this commit tee to address a few words of counsel to those who are to carry the banners and fight the battles of democracy in this slate we lyive now so long been accustomed to the blessings of good government un der democratic rule in north carolina thai we may he in danger of forgetting the horrors from which we emerged when our party by a grand uprising u our people obtained control of the legislative branch of the state government lifteen â– veurs ago to those who are old enough in remember the reckless extravagance the unblushing corruption the defiant w le snesd of the negro and carpet-bug way which all but ended in war and bloodshed it seems like a iiideous dream and in the enjoyment of the peaceful present and in the anticipation of a still brighter future they might prefer to pul away the memory of it all forever but as history is ever repeating itself i is well to be reminded of the pa-t and that the people who did these things once will if opportunity is offered do the like again lndoubtedly the democratic party is still the party of virtue and intelligence in this slate and so long as the ignordnl blacks continue to stand together in a solid phalanx on one side the intelligent white men of north carolina are com pelled by every consideration of prudence and in sheer self-defence to stand togeth eronthe oilier they hum see to it that they who pay the taxes shall have the controlling voice in directing how these taxes are expended no fair minded man anywhere can find fault with them for this wo do not contend that we have made no mistakes in the decade and a half during which we have had control of legislation in the state but we do in sist that our mistakes have been few and j comparatively unimportant and that re ' 3iilt3 on the whole have been such as to command the approval of all fair-minded men our state in spite ot the poverty from which she has not yet recovered has become respected abroad wkileal home peace contentment and compara tive prosperity and happiness i everywhere prevail we found the pub lic treasury empty and our credit i rapt we found that the irresponsible strong rs and our late slaves who with ;: few corrupt or ambitious native whites had assumed control of our qnances had in three years ruu up in the name of the state an immense fraudulent debi to pay the interest on which they levied enormous taxes from an impoveris people while they were utterly regard less of the accumulating interest of < ur honest debt we at once declared the fraudulent debt 1 6,000,000 of bonds is sued withoul consideration to those Â« property was to be made to pay i - a binding neither in law nor in con science and wiped ou1 the whole of it then in view of the fact that the ho debt had grown too large for the pe to pay i all we proceeded i viake terms with the state's creditors and effect a settlement which was mutually satisfac tory by ilii art of 1879 our unsecured debt â– ! of 12,627,045 bearing 6 per cent interest will have been reduced to 3 5s0,oll bearing 4 percent and the â– of 2,795,000 for which the state's stock in the north carolina railroad company was liable to be sold by de rce in tli federal court has nearly all been ex tended for forty years and the state's control ofourmost valuable railroad pro perty secured to her indefinitely the dividends annually paid on her shares are more than sufficient to meet the in j c-ton this extended debt and so fair has the credit of n^orth caaolina grown un der the care f her loyal democratic sons j thai her 1 per cent bonds are worth par j in the markets of the world and her 6 per cents are bringing a premium of more than 25 cents on the dollar what other southern state can boast as much we found that during the three years of republican rule thejt had handled and | wasted upwards of a million dollars be longing to the educational i'und and had paid less than forty thousand for teach ing the children of the state we have j now fully established a system of public j schools nearly equal to the best in full operation school houses in every hamlet open for several months in each year and the school sessions yearly increasing in length with graded schools and nor mal schools in which our teachers better prepared for their duties at our i principal centres of population â€” every dollar of our half a million raised for school purposes legitimately applied we found our unfinished railroads not ' withstanding the millions of bonds issued professedly to build them making no progress their ties rotting and their iron rusting these roads are now some of them finished and the others rapidly ap proaching completion while new and branches have been begun and fin ished since the new era dawned in l871 our mileage of roads has nearly doubled and the public debt not increased we have built two new asylums for the in j sane of large dimensions and the peni tentiary of suffi ieiit size and strength to i safelj keep all the convici s likely sentenced to it is nearing compli and all this without an increase of our taxes and to pay as we go has our motto no new bonds have been is sued nor any deficit made for these great works soon they will be oil-hand and our state taxes may be still further re duced or if the people prefer ii the ex cess maybe applied in the still better education of our childri n it ha - been and continues to be tin poli y of the democratic party to use the labor of the convicts to the penitentiary in work on railroad and draining th swamp lands belonging to the state for the purpose of bringing them into mark et and to avoid employing it u competi tion with the honest labor of the country there seems to be a growing dispositii n to have convict labor employed in part on the public highways so far as it can u done consistently with the requirements of the constitution that our penal insti tions must be made as nearly self up porting is possible the administration of the executive de partment of the state government since the inauguration of a democratic govern or in 1877 has been all t ha could reason ably '><â– expected vance jarvis s able wise and progressive so far as progress is consistent with true conserva tism have done or omitted little for party friends to criticise or political enemies to complain of they have exe cuted the laws faithfully and fairly and with justice to all classes and colors as much may be said of the adminis tration of justice and expounding the laws by our democratic judges their delicate duties have been faithfully exe cuted and their great and increasing labor.-i conscientiously performed we have heard of no suggi tion of uuftiitliful ]!â– â€¢ ; s and of no uspii ion i f coi ruption with respect toanj of them we therefore coufldt ntly comim u i the judicial i . pre i ntcd by our late convention smith a he and jlerrimon for the supreme \ court and connor ( lark boykin mont â– ry grav >, avery and james ii jlerrimon the last the only one who has ! not heretofore served as judge and bis high character and ability ar universally j ii support of the law-lo ing i \ oters of the state and all such are uv | ed to go to the polls and give iheru deserv j . d endor â– n < lit i i submitted with all â€¢ â– â– tin 1 n â– â– that j prc jident ' leveland ha r . .â€¢ rned his promise mad on his nominal ion : i his inuguratiou to conduct 1 1 aicnl of the l t nited states on bu.si priii iple -. ! !â– â– has ni v r forgotten i lie office is a public trust ; i j use his own maxim and that one who is entrusted with t 1 '- conduct of a great j governmi ; '. should employ at least that ' mea u re of watchfulness pruden my and fail hfulness in the <'â– ; â– his duties that i expected of one has the direction and control of the af fairs of an ordinary person or cor tion whether it suited political friend or foe he has executed the laws a : he found j them in the statute hook in a manner to command the applause of the la wabi of all i i i s his courage industry faith fulness ai i apacitv for labi r ! a â– e i i i i prais â– . millions i if m mi v ' . â– ilre.i>lv !"â– ' n raved by reforms institute i i ui di r his admimstr ition :: i he dcpai ;- j it washington have 'Â».â– â– ! and nro ii inj purified of mu.:h rottenness and forrnption which had accnmulate'i ui refu rcanadm : nistration byhisra gni tionof t!ie snath as an integral part of the country with pqual right by selecting members of his cabint't anil appointing for ei^rn ministers from southern states he has put an en'd toscctionalism we hope forever tlie bloodj srirt can never be raised as a r:i!!y;iil r banner again some conceding thnt the present con ireÂ»5 of which only the iowÂ«t lii>:~eis democratic h:is under democratic influence rlon mucli for the benefit of the country â€” for example passing laws whereby over 50 iiij'i 0 â– land granted to railroad companies n condition and unearned by them were declared forfeited nud thereby saved for a ttial settlers cirtain bills tor the protecti n oi labor c â€” yet complain that the democrats have not abolished the inter nal revenue system and reduced thetariffto i r venue basis with only inc.iedntal pro teutii i to our industries to them we rej y that the only hope to do these things is in the democratic party and not in that party wliicii u rcsponsable for the system and in tugurated these high protective tariff and that our congressmen from this state at least have done their duty in trying to a bolish the oncand ameliorate the thtr and it becomes us to pec that good democrats ire a<!ain sent toconpress with renewed in it rue tions to exert all their influence toward the attainment of these desired ends in our address two years ago we assured the public that the so-called liberal party xisted but in name even the name is now i thing of the past that device to divide md weaken our party having failed our idrersarifs are trying another plan to dis tract and ruin us not daring to oppose us in many sections with republican candidat es or th 5a called liberals they find inour ranks professed democrats ambition self ish men Â« ho for some reason c uld not se nrc nomination from democratic conven tions and these they persuade to run asi rlependent democrats well they know tint if such men are successful they must of necessity cease to belong to the party whose rules they have ignored and whose organization they have attempted to de stroy nn 1 would ultimately join those to whom they we their o'ection an open enemy in much to l>e preferred to a faithless friend and true democrats will see that such independents are repudiated and ig nominiously routed in 1884 we carried our state ticket by about 20,000 majority and a legislature over two-thirds democratic was returned w hi'e we sent democratic congressmen from eight out of our nine districts this was done by organization and hard work let us now sec to it that onr organization is preserved and let us again go to work it is now less than six weeks to the day of election and to make signal victory at a points certain much remains to be dune every good citizen owes it to patriotism to rote and to vote intelligently and rightly heshoul i inform himself aud his neighbors on the public issues beforehand and vhen the day of election comes he should give it or at least a par of it to his country it he fails in this and bad men are elected or bad laws in ide he has no right to complain lie has nei lected to do his duty so with organized work we will a r in - : t eeil let the township committee set that every democrat and every one who an be persua led t vote the democratic ticket is properly registered and has the opportu nity to gel t . the p i is md vote let these committees report frequently and re to the county committees and let the coun tv committees report to this committee then on election day let every democrat do his duly and the stale will be safe in democratic hands for two years longer and we wi!i b assured of good conservative ovcnimcii for that period at least ii ii battle chairman 15 c beckwith secretary state papers pleas c education and democracy under democratic administrations the disbursements for teaching the white and black children of north carolina for nine year excepting about 5 per cent for expenses have been 83,998,871.63 the university normal school for whites and the state normal school at fayetteville for col ored people were established in i s "";. and later eight normal schools con veniently located in different parts of the st;it four for each race were ad ded to the two already in existence later still the university normalschool was discontinued and eonr others loca ted in different sections of the state and costing the same amount money were substituted therefor these normal schools are intended to teach the teacher how to teach most effectively and that they are of great value has been shown in tiie improve ment of the public school system and the betti r primary instruction thai now prevails throughout the state l'wo thousand seven hundred and twenty one teachers were last year reached and bi nefitted by these normal schools arid three thousand four hundred and eighty five more were reached by the institutes established likewise by the democrats held in nearly every county of the mate and paid for with about 4.oc0 from the school fund this liberal and progressive action more over has secured to the state for six years past twelve peabody scholarships good each for two years at the nash ville normal college and worth each a considerable stun th â– aggregate a niount exp niled annually by th â– n ocrats for te ieh r training is al s'j'j : 00 the v hole educ tional si - tem has been raised to a high degree of efficiency graded schools have established in all the leading tow . . the people generally have be i ar to greater interest in public e i ontrasi with the state of things der the ra/lical regime succeeding the war n 18gs is69 ls70 th syearsof republican misrule the money report ed as expended oa scho i was 33 981.80 in 1809 the value of school erty was nothing repubbenn su-i perintendent ashley left a plan a very handsome btft utterly useless plan f r building fchool houses and thnt was all nothing was really expended for schools br the radicals during their carnival of crime the school money was used for the purpose of paying i â€¢: lontj-termed and frequent rep can legis i es most < xi r i . l in - per diem and : . s in j s 7"i m l 515.97 were paid for school houses in 18s2-'83-*84 and so a total of 293 129.15 n 1885 the value of school proper in nine counties was 565.960.11 ; the school houses have been incr in number and quadrupled in ralue by beiiiit made tit 6 r school use in 1 under democratic rul â€” one â– money paid for schools anmounted to 630,552.32 nnd in the four years of l882-'83-'84 and 85 the amount was s2,296,790.00 all this too h .- been done by the democrats without increase of . . - - taxatii n and not only so these disbursements mad â– and the interest i n the i e ed debt is paid with a tax bill levying much less than one-half the pro tax collected by the republicans before the present school law was â€¢ n cied ued the new bonds issued t fund the sta'e debt let the people think of these differences when they come to vote for members of the legislature this fall and let them bear in mind the 1 that a vote for a republican or for ;â€¢.!! independent who i bui a republi in disguise isjnsl so ram h done toward i bringing again upon us the evils of re j publican rule which seem now to all itood men since we have shaken * off the mo trageous a ] evercalled upon i /.' . â€¢ -'â€¢ obst rrer - â€” â– a>kc items about the 3:ate fair opens tuesday the 26th el friday the 29th oct the race track is buili ii}>on most approv â– i plan uu ler the dire - tion of george 1 vvilkes e>litor of the new york sj railro id tra tion i fr un the fair is die er this year any time her ; ifore two hundred s^or tors will be present illustrate 1 pa i lists 1 make sketch 3 to p ibli h in papers articles will 1 â– ' â– charge over tin section of the si 'â– a silver cornet band will i . music for the 1 iir pr si lent ( le ian 1 \ to attend ] 1 â– ample accommodation f tend if 3 r , . nt c the is " â– dr >: â– - . â– th m . ral-j eigh ! t week to have ] ded if it did not for filling vacancies for d i ol i largr ship of the stal bynum declines the nomin chief justice of the suprej saying having once occupieil a seal supreme â€¢ iri ; â– :â€¢ ... i am d clined to renew ray ! and i do not think it frail ; i candidate for an office i wo ild not ac cepl if elected to next si i ' the merry ch stnut _ â€” :â€¢ â– judge from the i _ : tii 1 itest n â– the " i nut bell 1 so-called a sori â– â– wearers coai and i designed to : down a ( malisi pt his favorite and n recital there is n j in lenoir wi ffer a r â– . delivery to us of the iue i ; the inventor then the bee cr.u draw 1 weight of its own bod ] i lift a million tii ht h you doubt thi â€¢ si down on o a caed t . . â– n â€¢â€¢â– ; an i indiscri tions â€¢ ! : nes eurlj . i ! w i.i -> i i n rei ' . â€¢ â– i ' or cn.vhge i â€¢ i iseph t in mat " ' i ! a â– lad â– .: ; >. a r . i on car l-b â€¢ rd n n ' dyspepsja indigestion weakness ' nd fevers malaria liver complaint i idney tt . neuralgia and rheumatism tt n - r i 7 'â– w j ing a=d de ,. ~ life to tha i women ar.j : - di dren fc i w ia.v 1 -. aaaaaaj p on a : n v rj hurt ul tf pos â€¢ -, . . "â– â€¢. .-.. b!c medici \ comb ski - j 4 -^ â– fully ma > e plea'tr.nt '-> h k 1 â– â– - voiina drug and chemical company baituoks id i >. i . 3 '>"Â»":!.' ci t'sor i . : ' i i â€¢ i * , < â€¢ its > ' 1 1l6 : '. â– - i i .â– â– ','. ri â– â€¢:: 5 ! umnnty..j]j tin gljrii â– bj on profession 1 i ran 1 i ie c 1 â– rsonsliivj r is the publication - â– i â– â– .â– i :â– --.!"â– n i i m â– - â– .â– â– â– - ich i â– â– . â– > a gencrosa proposilioo â– â– : . . i:rli skin . thfi ruailc ' r<*ti â– â€¢ :â– â€¢ â– ivostllcrrul i'srcrs i i ' - ' i my hand what â– .- ' ' ra:i . lit t f i icdi , â– : â– . cnthhcrt : . tha ' ra t â€¢*, - i 'â– . v.^.h v ' i r my - . . ... v i â€¢ lm .\ : nit i . : i ha n li - i.unc . ' . ipfll of 1h '. my â€¢ irhll . !'. '.) 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the carolina watchman 0 xvh.-thied seeies 3alis3ury n c october 7 1886 no 0 rictor grain deills kellers patent .â– r sa i e to the farmers of row , l j for cash or well secueed time itotes xhis i rill stands a1 the very â€¢ h nd is unsurpassed by any rin america it sows wheat clover seed and bearded ts to"other with fertilizers i admirably the quantity per acre ran be changed in an instant by a â– miil motion of the hand ' r l ud what people who have '' iy about it \\ \ ernon rowan co n c sept 15th l^g i u -â€¢ 1 the victor kellers paten lor si vcral years and i consider â€¢ machine one can set it in an : to sow any quantity of wheat or re from one peck to four bush ! . ] led its as well as it dues â– â– ' i m fert izers to pel - in i know it to bo strictly a no 1 ; aii'l combines great strength with o 1 qualities w a lu ki-v salisbury n c sept 15th 18s6 last spring i borrowed mr white fralcj's victor kellers patent grain drill and put in my oats with it it sowed bcimk'd mid non-bearded oats to perfection i believe it to be tlie best grain drill i : ner t>aw it sews wheat or oats and clover iced mid fertilizer all o c and j have it one for this t';ili"s bccdiny of the agent john a boyden richard ii cowan salisbury x ('. si t 17th 168g ihivc used the victor kellers patent i drill for the past t-n years au 1 con . far the best drill made i have uu.t ivd the bechford & huffman drill but t,t(.mtl prefer the vic-tor because it is mucii the most convenient and 1 believe victor ill last as ion as two deck & huffman drills the victor sows ill kimlti of grain satisfactorily frank bkuathed jhq a boyden piedmont wagons yes piedmont wag33s made up at hickory yen know why they can't be beat they stand when they ought torighl square at the fhdht ! it wa3 a hard fight but thay have won it ! just read what people say about them and it yon want a wagon come quickly and buy one cither tor cash or on tim sai.lslifuy x < '. sept 1st i8s >. two years ajjo 1 bought n very li:;ht o-hor*e piedmont wagon of the agent lm a boyden have used it marly all he time since have tried it severely in ti'iul i n lc saw loj;s in, avery and james ii jlerrimon the last the only one who has ! not heretofore served as judge and bis high character and ability ar universally j ii support of the law-lo ing i \ oters of the state and all such are uv | ed to go to the polls and give iheru deserv j . d endor â– n < lit i i submitted with all â€¢ â– â– tin 1 n â– â– that j prc jident ' leveland ha r . .â€¢ rned his promise mad on his nominal ion : i his inuguratiou to conduct 1 1 aicnl of the l t nited states on bu.si priii iple -. ! !â– â– has ni v r forgotten i lie office is a public trust ; i j use his own maxim and that one who is entrusted with t 1 '- conduct of a great j governmi ; '. should employ at least that ' mea u re of watchfulness pruden my and fail hfulness in the lv !"â– ' n raved by reforms institute i i ui di r his admimstr ition :: i he dcpai ;- j it washington have 'Â».â– â– ! and nro ii inj purified of mu.:h rottenness and forrnption which had accnmulate'i ui refu rcanadm : nistration byhisra gni tionof t!ie snath as an integral part of the country with pqual right by selecting members of his cabint't anil appointing for ei^rn ministers from southern states he has put an en'd toscctionalism we hope forever tlie bloodj srirt can never be raised as a r:i!!y;iil r banner again some conceding thnt the present con ireÂ»5 of which only the iowÂ«t lii>:~eis democratic h:is under democratic influence rlon mucli for the benefit of the country â€” for example passing laws whereby over 50 iiij'i 0 â– land granted to railroad companies n condition and unearned by them were declared forfeited nud thereby saved for a ttial settlers cirtain bills tor the protecti n oi labor c â€” yet complain that the democrats have not abolished the inter nal revenue system and reduced thetariffto i r venue basis with only inc.iedntal pro teutii i to our industries to them we rej y that the only hope to do these things is in the democratic party and not in that party wliicii u rcsponsable for the system and in tugurated these high protective tariff and that our congressmen from this state at least have done their duty in trying to a bolish the oncand ameliorate the thtr and it becomes us to pec that good democrats ire ae preferred to a faithless friend and true democrats will see that such independents are repudiated and ig nominiously routed in 1884 we carried our state ticket by about 20,000 majority and a legislature over two-thirds democratic was returned w hi'e we sent democratic congressmen from eight out of our nine districts this was done by organization and hard work let us now sec to it that onr organization is preserved and let us again go to work it is now less than six weeks to the day of election and to make signal victory at a points certain much remains to be dune every good citizen owes it to patriotism to rote and to vote intelligently and rightly heshoul i inform himself aud his neighbors on the public issues beforehand and vhen the day of election comes he should give it or at least a par of it to his country it he fails in this and bad men are elected or bad laws in ide he has no right to complain lie has nei lected to do his duty so with organized work we will a r in - : t eeil let the township committee set that every democrat and every one who an be persua led t vote the democratic ticket is properly registered and has the opportu nity to gel t . the p i is md vote let these committees report frequently and re to the county committees and let the coun tv committees report to this committee then on election day let every democrat do his duly and the stale will be safe in democratic hands for two years longer and we wi!i b assured of good conservative ovcnimcii for that period at least ii ii battle chairman 15 c beckwith secretary state papers pleas c education and democracy under democratic administrations the disbursements for teaching the white and black children of north carolina for nine year excepting about 5 per cent for expenses have been 83,998,871.63 the university normal school for whites and the state normal school at fayetteville for col ored people were established in i s "";. and later eight normal schools con veniently located in different parts of the st;it four for each race were ad ded to the two already in existence later still the university normalschool was discontinued and eonr others loca ted in different sections of the state and costing the same amount money were substituted therefor these normal schools are intended to teach the teacher how to teach most effectively and that they are of great value has been shown in tiie improve ment of the public school system and the betti r primary instruction thai now prevails throughout the state l'wo thousand seven hundred and twenty one teachers were last year reached and bi nefitted by these normal schools arid three thousand four hundred and eighty five more were reached by the institutes established likewise by the democrats held in nearly every county of the mate and paid for with about 4.oc0 from the school fund this liberal and progressive action more over has secured to the state for six years past twelve peabody scholarships good each for two years at the nash ville normal college and worth each a considerable stun th â– aggregate a niount exp niled annually by th â– n ocrats for te ieh r training is al s'j'j : 00 the v hole educ tional si - tem has been raised to a high degree of efficiency graded schools have established in all the leading tow . . the people generally have be i ar to greater interest in public e i ontrasi with the state of things der the ra/lical regime succeeding the war n 18gs is69 ls70 th syearsof republican misrule the money report ed as expended oa scho i was 33 981.80 in 1809 the value of school erty was nothing repubbenn su-i perintendent ashley left a plan a very handsome btft utterly useless plan f r building fchool houses and thnt was all nothing was really expended for schools br the radicals during their carnival of crime the school money was used for the purpose of paying i â€¢: lontj-termed and frequent rep can legis i es most < xi r i . l in - per diem and : . s in j s 7"i m l 515.97 were paid for school houses in 18s2-'83-*84 and so a total of 293 129.15 n 1885 the value of school proper in nine counties was 565.960.11 ; the school houses have been incr in number and quadrupled in ralue by beiiiit made tit 6 r school use in 1 under democratic rul â€” one â– money paid for schools anmounted to 630,552.32 nnd in the four years of l882-'83-'84 and 85 the amount was s2,296,790.00 all this too h .- been done by the democrats without increase of . . - - taxatii n and not only so these disbursements mad â– and the interest i n the i e ed debt is paid with a tax bill levying much less than one-half the pro tax collected by the republicans before the present school law was â€¢ n cied ued the new bonds issued t fund the sta'e debt let the people think of these differences when they come to vote for members of the legislature this fall and let them bear in mind the 1 that a vote for a republican or for ;â€¢.!! independent who i bui a republi in disguise isjnsl so ram h done toward i bringing again upon us the evils of re j publican rule which seem now to all itood men since we have shaken * off the mo trageous a ] evercalled upon i /.' . â€¢ -'â€¢ obst rrer - â€” â– a>kc items about the 3:ate fair opens tuesday the 26th el friday the 29th oct the race track is buili ii}>on most approv â– i plan uu ler the dire - tion of george 1 vvilkes e>litor of the new york sj railro id tra tion i fr un the fair is die er this year any time her ; ifore two hundred s^or tors will be present illustrate 1 pa i lists 1 make sketch 3 to p ibli h in papers articles will 1 â– ' â– charge over tin section of the si 'â– a silver cornet band will i . music for the 1 iir pr si lent ( le ian 1 \ to attend ] 1 â– ample accommodation f tend if 3 r , . nt c the is " â– dr >: â– - . â– th m . ral-j eigh ! t week to have ] ded if it did not for filling vacancies for d i ol i largr ship of the stal bynum declines the nomin chief justice of the suprej saying having once occupieil a seal supreme â€¢ iri ; â– :â€¢ ... i am d clined to renew ray ! and i do not think it frail ; i candidate for an office i wo ild not ac cepl if elected to next si i ' the merry ch stnut _ â€” :â€¢ â– judge from the i _ : tii 1 itest n â– the " i nut bell 1 so-called a sori â– â– wearers coai and i designed to : down a ( malisi pt his favorite and n recital there is n j in lenoir wi ffer a r â– . delivery to us of the iue i ; the inventor then the bee cr.u draw 1 weight of its own bod ] i lift a million tii ht h you doubt thi â€¢ si down on o a caed t . . â– n â€¢â€¢â– ; an i indiscri tions â€¢ ! : nes eurlj . i ! w i.i -> i i n rei ' . â€¢ â– i ' or cn.vhge i â€¢ i iseph t in mat " ' i ! a â– lad â– .: ; >. a r . i on car l-b â€¢ rd n n ' dyspepsja indigestion weakness ' nd fevers malaria liver complaint i idney tt . neuralgia and rheumatism tt n - r i 7 'â– w j ing a=d de ,. ~ life to tha i women ar.j : - di dren fc i w ia.v 1 -. aaaaaaj p on a : n v rj hurt ul tf pos â€¢ -, . . "â– â€¢. .-.. b!c medici \ comb ski - j 4 -^ â– fully ma > e plea'tr.nt '-> h k 1 â– â– - voiina drug and chemical company baituoks id i >. i . 3 '>"Â»":!.' ci t'sor i . : ' i i â€¢ i * , < â€¢ its > ' 1 1l6 : '. â– - i i .â– â– ','. ri â– â€¢:: 5 ! umnnty..j]j tin gljrii â– bj on profession 1 i ran 1 i ie c 1 â– rsonsliivj r is the publication - â– i â– â– .â– i :â– --.!"â– n i i m â– - â– .â– â– â– - ich i â– â– . â– > a gencrosa proposilioo â– â– : . . i:rli skin . thfi ruailc ' r*.'â€¢-â– '. â– â– ' . â– â– - r a the â– . â– - - . - i . '- â– - . . j â– . uiotl i j c ..-â€¢ â– . . : .- - ) i - . iisv j.\y.l ". . ". ~.:":\ trea:.-3c 00 v'.j-k be i ~. .'" -: '.- -